Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Sex on the Margin and Porn

Over at the Marginal Revolution, they have an excellent post on Sex on the Margin. It covers how people respond to the changing price of sex. As the intro suggests, raise the price of sex with women, then men will have sex with other men, as is the case in prison. I've shamelessly copied the post below, but I want to make one point before I turn over the microphone. One the post does not discuss the quantity dimension, nor does it discuss close substitutes such as masturbation. It seems to me that my research on porn and strippers intersects with this research. AIDS raised the cost of both homosexual male sex and heterosexual sex, thereby increasing the amount of homosexual female sex and reducing the amount of heterosexual sex and homosexual male sex. Thus one can partially explain the rise of porn - a complement to masturbation which is itself an imperfect substitute for sex - as a result of the increased price of sex due to AIDS.

Sexual preferences are primarily biological in origin. But sexual choice is about preferences and constraints. Raise the price of sex with women and more men will choose to have sex with other men - that's what happens in prisons.

In a remarkable paper, Andrew Francis (a graduate student at the University of Chicago) examines how AIDS has changed sexual choice. With admirable precision, Francis lays out the price of sex:

...it is thousands of times more likely that a male would get HIV having sex with a man than having sex with a woman. In terms of AIDS-related mortality, the expected cost of having unprotected sex once with a man is almost $2000, while the expected cost of having unprotected sex once with a woman is less than a dollar.

Thus AIDS changes the price of sex, do we observe changes in choice? Francis wants to be careful about causality so he uses a clever instrumental variables approach. He reasons that knowledge of AIDS and thus responsiveness to price is correlated with knowing someone who has AIDS and that knowing someone who has AIDS is exogeneous to other factors influencing sexuality. Unfortunately, it appears that he only has information on whether a relative has AIDS and genetic factors mean exogeneity is unlikely to hold. In fact, we would probably expect that simply knowing someone with AIDS is positively correlated with being homosexual (especially in 1992 when the survey was taken).

Indeed, Francis finds, as expected, that women who have a relative with AIDS are more likely to be engage in homosexual acts and identify as being homosexual. But Francis finds that men who have a relative with AIDS are significantly less likely to:

...have had sex with a man during the last sexual event...have had a male sexual partner in the last year... say they are sexually attracted to men...rate having sex with someone of the same gender as appealing...[or] think of themselves as homosexual or bisexual.


The tendency to greater homosexuality among women and less among men is exactly what the economic theory predicts given how AIDS affects the price of sex. Genetic and social factors will have greater difficulty resolving this bifurcation so I think Francis has the upper-hand on the argument, although there may be counter-arguments based on the gay-uncle theory).

Importantly, note also that Francis finds that not only is sexual choice malleable, as the prison story I opened with suggests, but so are sexual desire and identity. At least on the margin! (A point that non-economists are likely to miss.)


Keywords: Porn, AIDS, Sex

2 comments:

giddings said...
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giddings said...

Thanks for pointing out this research to us. It is, indeed, fascinating. I believe there is research to show that once the "cocktail" came out with great success in extending longevity among those with HIV, that gay men increased the practice of unprotected sex. This is either a direct response of perceived fall in costs or just stupidity. I am, by the way, an empirical example of their research.